Buffalo Pitts Co. v. Alderdice

177 S.W. 1044, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 727
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1915
DocketNo. 7225.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 1044 (Buffalo Pitts Co. v. Alderdice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buffalo Pitts Co. v. Alderdice, 177 S.W. 1044, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 727 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

April 15, 1912, appellant Buffalo Pitts Company and appellee entered into a written contract by which, appellant sold to appellee, and appellee purchased from appellant, certain threshing machinery, an enumeration of which is unnecessary, save that among tbe machinery so sold was a feeder. By the contract appellant Buffalo Pitts Company warranted that the machinery should be “of good material, well constructed, and, with proper use and management, capable of doing well tbe work for which the machines respectively are made and sold.” As part of the warranty quoted it was further agreed, if any “parts” of the machinery after six days’ use should fail to meet the warranty in any respect, that the appellee should give appellant immediate written notice thereof at appellant’s home office in Buffalo, N. Y., by registered letter, stating particularly the parts that failed to meet the *1045 warranty and wherein, and allow the appellant a reasonable time to get the machine or “part” with a skilled workman and remedy the defect, etc. Other provisions in the contract required further and telegraphic notice if the skilled workman failed to correct the defect, and provided for additional time for another expert; also provided that in case of the failure of second expert to cure the trouble the “part” was to be returned to the agency delivering same, whereupon appellant had the option of either furnishing another machine or “part” or of rescinding the contract by a return of the money or notes given in payment thereof, and thereby be released from all further liability. It was also stipulated in the contract that failure to give the written notices enumerated should be a waiver of the warranty and a release of appellant thereon, without in any manner affecting the liability of appellee. On the same day that the contract just outlined was entered into, another contract between appellee and appellant Buffalo Pitts Company was also entered into, by which appellant sold to appellee a single cylinder traction engine for the agreed price of $700. Said contract was similar in all respects to the one outlined above, being, as was the first one, appellant’s printed form of contract, save that- there was inserted in the last contract the following:

“This is a secondhand engine, and has been used about 30 days, and is guaranteed to be in first-class condition in every respect.”

Both contracts also contained the following concluding provision, printed in comparatively large type:

“This warranty does not cover belting nor secondhand machinery sold.”

September 12, 1012, appellee commenced this suit against appellant Buffalo Pitts Company, a corporation, and against appellant F. S. Cronk Company, also a corporation. The suit, for the purpose of this appeal, was to recover of appellant Buffalo Pitts Company certain damages, the alleged difference in value of the engine in the condition in which it was when delivered to appellee and what would have been its value had it been in the condition it was represented to be when it was sold to appellee; also to recover of both Buffalo Pitts Company and F. S. Cronk Company for the loss in operating expenses which appellee suffered due to the failure of the feeder to comply with the warranty. Other items of damage were sued for, but reference thereto is unnecessary, since there was no recovery.

Appellant Buffalo Pitts Company by way of defense pleaded the provisions of the agreement, which we have detailed, and appellee’s failure to comply with them, particularly in giving the notice required therein, and, being bound thereby, had, as a consequence, waived ali damages. Appellant F. S. Cronk Company pleaded the general denial, and specially that it was not liable for the damages sought to be recovered, because in the transactions relied on by appellee it was acting only as selling agent for appellant Buffalo Pitts Company.

There was a trial before the district judge without a jury, resulting in a judgment for appellee against Buffalo Pitts Company for $250, the difference in value between the engine agreed to be delivered to appellee and the one actually delivered, and judgment for appellee against both Buffalo Pitts Company and F. S. Cronk Company for $275, the amount lost by appellee in running expenses oh account of the feeder being defective. From such judgment, both Buffalo Pitts Company and the F. S. Cronk Company have appealed.

All the facts necessary to a disposition of the case are contained in the conclusions of fact of the district judge, in reference to which no claim is made that the findings are not supported by the evidence, or that any fact, so supported and material to appellant’s defense, has been omitted. Accordingly we adopt them. They are as follows:

“First. That during the spring of 1912 J. M. Alderdice was desirous of purchasing a threshing outfit, consisting of a traction engine to operate the thresher and separator and feeder and other machinery incident to a full threshing outfit, and was for some time, through the authorized agents of the Buffalo Pitts Company, negotiating with them for such machinery.
“Second. That R. B. George was at said time the state agent and state manager for the state of Texas of the Buffalo Pitts Company, and that F. S. Cronk Company was at that time the local agent at Waxahachie for the Buffalo Pitts Company, and that R. H. Fincher was the acting agent for said F. S. Cronk Company.
“Third. That a number of propositions pro and con were submitted by the Buffalo Pitts Company through said agents to said plaintiff, and counter propositions submitted by the plaintiff to them, and that finally a trade was consummated by which the plaintiff became the purchaser of a secondhand traction engine and of a separator and feeder, all of which are described and mentioned in the contracts hereinafter referred to.
“Fourth. That R. B. George represented to the plaintiff that the engine in question had been run about 30 days and was as good as new, and that at the time that the contract hereafter referred to was written there was included in the contract a statement that ‘said engine was a secondhand engine and had been used about 30 days and is guaranteed to be in first-class condition in every respect.’
“Fifth. That J. M. Alderdice, the plaintiff, never saw the engine in question until it arrived in Waxahachie on board the cars; that the representations made by said George, and there included in said contract, were material representations; and that said Alderdice relied upon them and purchased the engine upon' said representations and guaranty.
“Sixth. That said representations were untrue, and that the said engine was not in first-class condition and was not as good as new.
“Seventh. That the difference in the value of said engine in the condition in which it was at the time it was delivered to plaintiff and what its value would have been, had it been in the condition it was so represented to be, was $250.
“Eighth. That during the negotiations between the plaintiff and the agents of the defenU-ant Buffalo Pitts Company, and in the discussion between them as to the character of the feeder the plaintiff desired, it was understood

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 1044, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffalo-pitts-co-v-alderdice-texapp-1915.